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Fiend Without a Face - Printable Version +- RepairmanJack.com Forums (https://repairmanjack.com/forum) +-- Forum: Other Topics (https://repairmanjack.com/forum/forum-9.html) +--- Forum: Off Topic (https://repairmanjack.com/forum/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: Fiend Without a Face (/thread-530.html) |
Fiend Without a Face - Ken Valentine - 12-16-2004 Maggers Wrote:I know this is a generalization, and I'm sure there are some female demolition specialists, but.... It isn't just boys being boys Maggers. Men will be boys too. ![]() Somebody said it once; "The only difference between a boy and a man is how much his toys cost." Racing cars, aerobatic planes, guns, I don't know. I tend to think a lot of guys just like really loud noises. Maybe it's just a "guy thing" . . . mostly. Ken V. Fiend Without a Face - Richard Kendrick - 12-16-2004 I have absolutely no idea why we did this when I was kid but we used to cover M80s in glue and roll them in BBs. Light it and run. Yikes! :o Disclaimer: Do not try this at home. RIK Fiend Without a Face - Ken Valentine - 12-16-2004 Richard Kendrick Wrote:I have absolutely no idea why we did this when I was kid but we used to cover M80s in glue and roll them in BBs. Light it and run. Yikes! :o Yikes is right! When I was about 13, a friend and I pulled the bullets out of a bunch of .22's, cut apart a couple of shotgun shells, opened an entire pack of firecrackers, and mixed all the various powders together. We then poured it all into the center of the rather large Sunday Denver Post newspaper, slipped in a bunch of firecracker fuses Scotch taped end to end, folded up the paper and bound it all up with some fine wire we found. We put it into a small hole in the ground, lit the fuse and ran. We only did this once as we were made to clean all the confetti from the neighbors yards. ![]() Not one speck of paper landed in our yard, and I'm still scratching my head over that. Ken V. Fiend Without a Face - Gerald Rice - 12-16-2004 Lisa Wrote:Great review, Paul. You should do more! Of the I was a Teenage... series. Foremost in memory was I was a Teenage Zombie. All zombies are mindless, eating creatures except for this teenager who is completely normal except for his sudden skin color change and lack of a pulse. I don't remember a lot except that one of the zombies looked a lot like Ron Jeremy... Suddenly, I'm reminded of a movie where a guy had a symbiote attached to his head that would give him a constant high so long as he killed people and ate their brains. It was in the 80's, but I can't remember the name. Fiend Without a Face - Blake - 12-16-2004 Ken Valentine Wrote:One nasty prank a guy did at work years back was to dip a guys brown bag into LN2 and freeze his lunch solid. Now that's my idea of funny. ![]() This next one's a little tamer than some posted above (especially the BB one! Yowza!). My uncle used to live on a cul-de-sac in the late '70s and early '80s, and for July 4th he'd bring boxes and boxes of fireworks back from Mexico. One of the grand events of the evening was when he'd lay gun powder in a line from one side of the street to the other, then lay hundreds of firecrackers down with their fuses touching the powder. That was a fun one to see go off. ![]() Blake Fiend Without a Face - Lisa - 12-16-2004 Gerald Rice Wrote:Of the I was a Teenage... series. Foremost in memory was I was a Teenage Zombie. All zombies are mindless, eating creatures except for this teenager who is completely normal except for his sudden skin color change and lack of a pulse. I don't remember a lot except that one of the zombies looked a lot like Ron Jeremy... No, it's not "I was a Teenage Zombie." It's a different movie from the 50s. Lisa Fiend Without a Face - Sam - 12-16-2004 Blake Wrote:In the "Fun and Possibly Dangerous Things to Do" category, I'd have to add liquid nitrogen. It's not an explosive, of course, but there is a way to get a similar effect.I saw something similar to this on "Mr. Wizard" one time and can't believe he was showing kids how to do this. I may be wrong on exactly how he did this... He boiled(??) the oxygen out of some water, poured it into a lead ball and capped it off. He then lowered the ball into a bucket containing dry ice and alcohol. A few seconds later and WHAMMO!! The lead ball split in 1/2 and dented the bucket. All I could think was, " How many kids watched this and took it to extremes?" Fiend Without a Face - Sam - 12-16-2004 Richard Kendrick Wrote:I have absolutely no idea why we did this when I was kid but we used to cover M80s in glue and roll them in BBs. Light it and run. Yikes! :o:eek: That is one thing we didn't do!! we just shot each other with the BB guns instead. Never at the face though!! Usually at the ass for the total effect of hilarity. Fiend Without a Face - Sam - 12-16-2004 Ken Valentine Wrote:Yikes is right!I have 2 friends who did the same but used a bit of garden hose instead of a paper. The explosion was far more intense than expected and Jason's parents easily heard it since they were just in the back yard. ![]() Fiend Without a Face - Mick C. - 12-16-2004 I remember watching the disembodied brains chasing people around when I was a kid on the Saturday morning horror movie show here in Phoenix. It scared me as a kid, when I saw it again later it caused me to snort beer out my nose I was laughing so hard. I just looked up "Fiend Without a Face" in Gene Warren's encyclopedic guide to horror films of the 1950s, "Keep Watching the Skies!" I was surprised to read the film was based on a short story by Amelia Reynolds Long ("The Thought Monster") that originally appeared in Weird Tales (of course, they published quite a few stinkers in their time). Forrest J. Ackerman was Long's agent and sold the story to the producer. The screenwriter, Herbert J. Leder also produced, wrote and directed a couple of B-movies known to those of us who spent too much time reading "Famous Monsters of Filmland" when young: "The Frozen Dead" (frozen Nazi soldiers) and "It!" (a remake of the Golem story with Roddy McDowell). Leder, who died in 1983, was a popular film and media teacher at Jersey City State College (another Jersey boy!). The stop-motion effects were done by a German special effects firm headed by a man who sounds like a member of the Junkwaffel: Baron Florenz Von Nordhoff. Gene quotes a disapproving review of the flick which appeared in Parents magazine at the time of release, which is pretty funny in itself: "If wishes ever do become horses no one would seriously object, especially beggars who may ride them. But in this fantastic opus, thought becomes a disgusting mass of brain...the film mixes international relations and science fiction irresponsibly." (???) |